It is not often that a co-host of The View stops mid-conversation to correct herself in real time, but that is exactly what Whoopi Goldberg did during Thursday’s episode. What began as a discussion about casting controversy surrounding Christopher Nolan’s upcoming film The Odyssey quickly took a detour when Goldberg made an offhand remark about Elon Musk that she walked back almost immediately after saying it.
Goldberg was introducing the topic to the panel when she referenced Musk by name, connecting him to South Africa and apartheid in a way that implied he had been complicit in or accepting of the regime. The comment landed and then, just as quickly, she pulled it back. Without waiting for pushback from her co-hosts or the audience, she acknowledged that she had no factual basis for the claim and apologized on the spot.
Whoopi draws the line herself
The retraction was notable for how swiftly it came. Goldberg stated plainly that she could not verify what she had just said, that she did not actually know enough about Musk’s personal history to make that characterization, and that she was taking it back. She was careful to distinguish between not liking someone and being able to make specific historical accusations about them.
Co-host Joy Behar pushed slightly, noting that Musk had lived in South Africa during the apartheid era, but Goldberg held her ground on the correction. She was not disputing geography or timeline. She was specifically stepping back from the implication that his presence there amounted to endorsement or apology for the system. It was a careful and deliberate distinction that she seemed intent on making clearly.
The Odyssey casting debate takes center stage
With the correction out of the way, the panel turned its full attention to the controversy that had started the conversation. Conservative voices had been loudly objecting to reports that Lupita Nyong’o would portray Helen of Troy and that Elliot Page would take on the role of Achilles in Nolan’s adaptation. The objections ranged from arguments about historical accuracy to discomfort with a transgender actor playing one of mythology’s most celebrated warriors.
The co-hosts were largely unified in their skepticism of those objections. Sunny Hostin brought a grounded academic perspective to the table, drawing on scholarly debate about the African and North African roots of Greek mythology and civilization. She pointed to longstanding historical arguments that challenge the idea of classical Greece as an entirely white European cultural project, and reminded viewers that figures like Andromeda have long been described in ancient texts as African.
Beauty, history and who gets to decide
Sara Haines took a lighter but pointed angle, directing attention to the painting a conservative commentator had used to argue that Helen of Troy was definitively white. Haines asked the question that the panel seemed to find genuinely unanswerable: how exactly does that image prove anyone is more beautiful than Lupita Nyong’o? The room agreed that beauty, by any reasonable measure, is not something ancient illustrations get to settle.
Alyssa Farah Griffin noted that for a man running multiple companies valued collectively in the trillions, Musk seemed to have an unusual amount of energy to spend on film casting decisions. The observation drew knowing reactions from the panel.
Whoopi closes with accountability
Goldberg brought the segment to a close by returning to where she had started, with Musk. She apologized again for having suggested something she could not support with facts. It was a clean and direct ending to a moment that could have easily spiraled. In a television landscape that rarely rewards self-correction, it was a rare and genuinely human thing to watch unfold in real time.

